PLAYGUIDE by Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author David Maraniss

PLAYGUIDE by Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author David Maraniss

written by ERIC SIMONSON based on the biography “When Pride Still Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi” PLAYGUIDE by Pulitzer Prize-winning author DAVID MARANIss directed by CAseY STANGL LOMBARDI PLAYGUIDE HOW A LEADER IS MADE “Leaders are made, they are not born. They are made by hard effort, which is the price which all of us must pay to achieve any goal that is worthwhile.” –Vince Lombardi Cleveland Play House’s 2012-13 season is full of legends and icons—Vince Lombardi, Janis Joplin, Bessie Smith, even the Suze Orman-esque financial guru at the center ofRich Girl. With people like these, it’s easy to forget that they weren’t always the famous figures we now perceive them to be. This couldn’t be more true Lombardi with his wife, Marie. than with the great Vince Lombardi, who struggled for nearly twenty years to get to the position that secured his place in the starting line-up of ‘football’s greatest.’ that Lombardi’s Catholic faith and Jesuit philosophy of “freedom through discipline” are what he often credits with his success. “I Lombardi developed his personal playbook of hard work derived my strength from daily mass and communion,” he said. and discipline early. Born to Italian immigrants in Brooklyn, Of course, Lombardi’s determination to overcome obstacles New York in 1913, Lombardi was raised in a devoutly Catholic became a hallmark of his coaching style with Green Bay, where household; in his late teens he planned to become a priest. his players knew him not only for his fiery temper but for his Instead, he accepted a football scholarship to Fordham commitment to discipline, teamwork, and excellence. University in the Bronx, where he overcame small size to become famous as one of the team’s “Seven Blocks of Granite.” In 1959 Lombardi After college he began teaching physics and Latin at St. Lombardi developed took over a team Cecilia’s High School in Englewood, New Jersey, while also that had just had working his way from assistant to head football coach. (It was his personal playbook the worst season during this time, in 1940, that he married Marie Planitz.) After 8 of hard work and in Packers history, years there, he began a series of career moves: first at his alma winning only one mater back in the Bronx, then two years as an assistant coach discipline early game, and led to the great Red Blaik at West Point, and finally his first pro them on to win the position, as offensive coordinator for the New York Giants, in NFL championships just two years later, in 1961 and 1962—and 1954. Then one day in 1959, Vince Lombardi got a life-changing then three more years in a row in ’65, ’66, and ’67. He died call from Wisconsin. (See The Father of Football on page 3 for a unexpectedly from intestinal cancer in 1970 at the age of 57. surprising Cleveland connection.) In honor of the man—a coach whose team won the very first The challenges of being married to a man who is married to Super Bowl—the Super Bowl trophy was named after him. It football took their toll on his wife, Marie, who was known to drink seems a fitting tribute that Lombardi’s name is attached to the heavily. In the Lombardi biography When Pride Still Mattered ongoing recognition of hard work and discipline in football’s (on which playwright Eric Simonson based his Lombardi script), biggest game. author David Maraniss writes, “[Lombardi] seemed preoccupied with football even on their honeymoon, and cut it short to get back to Englewood.” Lombardi was often frustrated during his nearly JOIN OUR PRE-SHOW PEP RALLY! twenty years as a perpetual assistant. As a Y ou could think of our interactive Pre-show man known for a vicious bark—and equally Conversation as a playgoers’ pep rally. It starts 45 fearsome bite—it may be surprising minutes before every performance and is free, fun and informative—and just like on game day, snacks and drinks are welcome! LOMBARDI PLAYGUIDE PAUL BROWN: The Father of Football The Packers wouldn’t be The Packers if it weren’t for Vince Lombardi, but football wouldn’t be football as we know it if it weren’t for Cleveland’s own Paul Brown. In fact, Lombardi might not be Lombardi if it weren’t for Brown! (More on that later.) From training techniques, to the invention of new equipment, to advances in equality on the field and off, our own Cleveland Browns namesake was, as coach Bill Walsh once said, “the father of the modern game of football.” Paul Brown was born in 1908 and raised in Massillon, Ohio. Like Lombardi, he was the son of working class parents who instilled in their son the importance of hard work and perseverance. Also Paul Brown’s many like Lombardi, he was not initially successful in football. As a innovations included young man, Lombardi’s small stature and poor eyesight kept him the face mask off his high school team—but he became the 5’8”, 180 lb. right guard in Fordham’s famed “Seven Blocks of Granite.” Likewise, Paul Brown’s slight, 150 lb. frame made him an unlikely candidate for Massillon Washington High School’s team—but the coach was impressed with his determination and by junior year Brown was the starting quarterback. He wasn’t as fortunate as a freshman at Ohio State, where he didn’t even make it past the Buckeyes’ tryouts. The tide turned when Brown transferred to Ohio’s Miami University. He again made starting quarterback, and guided the team to a 14-3 record in two seasons. It took Lombardi nearly 20 years to get a head coaching job; Brown’s ascent was quicker. Both Lombardi and Brown While McBride certainly knew the quality of coach he was paid their dues as high school coaches, and as coaches (or hiring, he couldn’t have known the extent to which Brown in Lombardi’s case, assistant coach) at colleges and military would change the game itself. Brown’s innovations include: training academies. During World War II, Navy Lieutenant Brown coached the Bluejacket football team at Great Lakes • First head coach to give his prospective players Naval Training Station outside Chicago. Around the same intelligence tests. time, Arch Ward, • First to integrate pro football, two years prior to Branch influential sports editor Rickey and Jackie Robinson in baseball. Lombardi might not of the Chicago Tribune, • First professional coach to have players undergo classroom be Lombardi if it proposed a new eight- team league to compete instruction, and to use film study. weren’t for Brown with the NFL, called the • Invented the first helmet with a facemask. All-American Football • Created the first “practice squad,” then called the “taxi Conference. Just prior to the 1945 Bluejackets season, Ward squad.” (Browns owner McBride also ran a cab company. visited Brown on behalf of the Cleveland franchise owner, Players who didn’t make the final roster cut, but might fill in “Mickey” McBride, to ask him to coach the new team. McBride for injuries, drove cabs!) offered $17,500 a year—more than any coach at any level—plus a stake in the team and a stipend while Brown finished his time On top of all with the military. The City of Cleveland was so excited about Paul Brown was inducted of these major the coach that the new team was named for him—against his changes to football, wishes—by popular demand! into the Pro Football Brown is also Hall of Fame in 1967 owed credit for the opportunity that GET YOUR PLAYBOOK— made Lombardi a legend. When coach Scooter McLean was FOR THE WHOLE SEASON! fired following a one-win season in 1958, Green Bay ownership phoned the now-legendary coach of the Browns looking for Play Guides like this one, for all CPH shows past and present, recommendations. Brown gave them the name of the offensive are available online NOW! Just click the ‘Go Deeper’ tab on assistant who got the Giants to run to daylight: Vincent each show’s page at clevelandplayhouse.com. Thomas Lombardi. LOMBARDI PLAYGUIDE PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND PIGSKIN: Football and Social Politics “Player’s Association gots a plan now. No one’s going to be taken advantage of.” -Dave Robinson, Lombardi “Pride...That’s what we used to play for The opposing team’s players aren’t the only thing tackled when the game was a game and not a in Lombardi. The 50s and 60s were a time of great social bunch of show business and reporters and political change in the U.S., and football was taking on the issues, too. Read on to learn how perspectives on and all the rest of that malarkey!” racial prejudice and players unions impacted the game—and American culture. negotiations in the play, Lombardi says, “Pride! That’s what we play for! That’s what we used to play for when the game was a PYA VS. PRIDE game and not a bunch of show business and reporters and all Labor unions, like the one Dave Robinson represents in the the rest of that malarkey!” play, have been a prominent and often controversial feature Since the formation of the NFLPA, it has engaged in conflict of American life for more than a century, and began to evolve with the team owners several times. The most recent was a 2011 even earlier. From the Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire to lockout, which occurred for 18 weeks in the off-season when Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker’s recent fight with public union members wanted better protections for retired players unions, differing views on what is ‘fair’ continue to shape our and improvements in safety, among other things, while the society.

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